This study investigates the complex relationship between fracture patterns and acoustic emission (AE) mechanisms during triaxial deformation experiments on Westerly granite under various confining pressures (5, 10, 20, and 40 MPa). Using numerical simulations with the Particle Flow Code (PFC2D, 6.0, Itasca Consulting Group Inc, Minneapolis, USA), this research emphasizes the significant influence of confining pressure on crack development, AE events, spatiotemporal distribution, energy dissipation, and peak stress in the samples. AE source mechanisms, categorized into T-Type, C-Type, and S-Type, show the dominance of T-Type fractures during post-peak unstable failure and the emergence of C-Type fractures as precursors to critical damage. Additionally, increasing confining pressure is found to correlate with changes in fracture dynamics, evidenced by an increase in big events and a decrease in small events. The analysis of b-values across different pressures reveals fluctuations that indicate change in fracture features. Fractures originate in the model center and propagate towards both ends as loading progresses, ultimately leading to failure. In summary, these findings provide important insights into the fracture patterns of granite and the underlying mechanisms of AE release. Moreover, they carry practical implications for identifying failure precursors and for the potential application of early warning systems in rock engineering.
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Yu Zhang
University of Turin
S. C. Vinciguerra
University of Turin
Gessica Umili
Polytechnic University of Turin
Applied Sciences
University of Turin
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Zhang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a286370a974eb0d3c0112e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/app16052281